Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 01, 2006
EDITORIALS: “Society Should End this System…Put Murderers Away for Life”
In a recent editorial, the Delaware News Journal concluded that the uncertainties and delays of the death penalty favor ending the system and replacing it with a sentence of life without parole. Such a system would better serve victims and their families, and bring swifter…
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Jul 28, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: Scientific American Investigates “CSI Effect”
An article in the July Scientific American examines the extent to which the television program “C.S.I.” and similar forensically-focused programs have increased the expectations of jurors in criminal trials. The article quotes University of California, Irvine, researchers Simon Cole and Rachel Dioso questioning the real impact of such programs: “That television might have an effect on courtrooms is not implausible… but to argue that ‘C.S.I.’ and similar shows are actually raising the…
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Jul 27, 2006
Andrea Yates Found Not Guilty By Reason of Insanity – Prosecutors Had Originally Sought Death
Four years after Andrea Yates faced the death penalty for the drowning deaths of her children, a second jury found her not guilty by reason of insanity. In Yates’ first capital murder trial in 2002, jurors convicted her of murder and recommended a sentence of life in prison. That conviction was overturned on appeal last year after it was shown that the state’s psychiatric witness presented false testimony. In the second trial, jurors deliberated for 13 hours before finding that Yates…
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Jul 27, 2006
California Blue Ribbon Commission Recommends Recording of Interrogations
The California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice has unanimously recommended that state lawmakers require electronic recording of all jailhouse interrogations. The commission added that the law should include a provision stating that if an officer fails to record an interrogation, jurors would be instructed to view the defendant’s statement with caution. Emphasizing that false confessions have been identified as the second most frequent cause of wrongful…
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Jul 25, 2006
Delaware Executions On Hold As Lethal Injection Challenge Considered
Delaware is the most recent state to have its executions halted while courts examine whether the state’s lethal injection procedures are cruel and unusual. Similar constitutional challenges have effectively put executions on hold in California, New Jersey, Florida, and Missouri. In a meeting with Delaware officials, Chief District Judge Sue L. Robinson ordered the state to respond to a lawsuit filed by Robert W. Jackson, whose scheduled May 19 execution was stayed so that his lethal injection…
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Jul 25, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: Comprehensive Registry of California Executions, 1851 – 2005
“Legal Executions in California: A Comprehensive Registry, 1851 – 2005,” by researchers Sheila O’Hare, Irene Berry, and Jesse Silva, provides comprehensive information on legal executions in California from 1851 to the present. Starting with the year the Criminal Practices Act first authorized executions in the state, the book’s entries are organized by year of execution and contain the felon’s name, race, age at death and a detailed narrative of the crime that resulted in the death sentence.
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Jul 24, 2006
New Jersey Commission Weighs Whether Death Penalty Should be Continued
During its first public hearing on capital punishment, the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission heard testimony from witnesses representing a broad spectrum of opinions. Almost all those testifying spoke against retaining the death penalty. Among those who testified before the 13-member panel were legal experts, religious leaders, murder victims’ family members, and exonerees such as Larry Peterson, who spent 18 years in a New Jersey prison for a rape and murder he did not commit. …
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Jul 23, 2006
Texas Office Investigating Possible Wrongful Execution Shows Signs of Bias
Based on taped conversations among members of the Bexar County prosecutor’s office, some participants in the investigation of the case of Ruben Cantu may have made up their minds before talking to those who now assert that Cantu was innocent. Cantu was executed in Texas in 1993. Significant evidence has emerged from a victim-witness and from a co-defendant that Texas may have executed the wrong man. The senior District Attorney, Mike Beers, said on tape, before interviewing the witnesseses,…
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Jul 19, 2006
PUBLIC OPINION: Wisconsin Voters Favor Life Without Parole Over Death Penalty
In a recent University of Wisconsin Badger Poll, more respondents favored a sentence of life without parole rather than the death penalty. Only 45% supported capital punishment, while 50% favored life sentences. When asked about the death penalty in theory, without any alternative sentences mentioned, 55.6% of Wisconsinites polled favored capital punishment for “cases involving a person who is convicted of first degree intentional homicides, if the conviction is supported by DNA evidence.” In…
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Jul 18, 2006
NEW VOICES: American Medical Association, EMT Association Say Participation in Executions Violates Medical Ethics
Both the American Medical Association (AMA) and the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians (NAEMT) recently issued public statements reminding members of their ethical obligation not to participate in legally authorized executions. As courts and legislatures throughout the country continue to struggle with questions related to lethal injection procedures, AMA president William G. Plested III noted that AMA policy clearly prohibits medical professionals from participating in…
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